So, so good, right?

By Sheila O’Grady

We were talking about culture, long before culture was cool!

Culture is HOT right now! For the record, Denise Boudreau-Scott and the Drive Team have been talking about culture and why it matters long before it was a hashtag! It certainly helps the culture narrative that companies like Google, Airbnb, and Zappos have given it priority and even flaunted their exceptional culture.

It’s now cool to be a culture nerd in every field, not just hip start-ups. Yay us!

Want to learn how to create a great culture? Want to find and keep the best employees? Register for our FREE WEBINAR

Brainwashing

What these mega-corporations have mastered is the idea that a successful overhaul of culture can only occur if the tippy top of leadership becomes unrelenting cheerleaders of exceptional culture. The emphasis on living values every day needs to be huge. Huge to the point where an employee may wonder if they’re being brainwashed with all the “rah rah sis boom bah” values talk.

We know they’re not. They know they’re not. But that’s the feeling when great culture permeates an organization. Everyone just naturally breathes it.

We have featured Airbnb in previous Drive blogs for their super cool business model. A couple of weeks ago their co-founder Brian Chesky wrote the slam dunk of all letters to his team stressing the value of culture in their organization. We were giddy over it! It didn’t even bother us that he uses some very bad language in it because we too think culture BLEEPING matters! But to make sure none of you were offended, we tweaked it a bit!

The Ultimate Culture Call to Action

Here is the (cleaned up) letter from Airbnb’s co-founder to his leadership team.

Hey team,

Our next team meeting is dedicated to Core Values, which are essential to building our culture. It occurred to me that before this meeting, I should write you a short letter on why culture is so important to Joe, Nate, and me.

After we closed our Series C with Peter Thiel in 2012, we invited him to our office. This was late last year, and we were in the “Berlin Room” showing him various metrics. Midway through the conversation, I asked him what was the single most important piece of advice he had for us.

He replied, “Don’t (BLEEP) up the culture.”

This wasn’t what we were expecting from someone who just gave us $150M. I asked him to elaborate and he said one of the reasons he invested in us was our culture. But he had a somewhat cynical view that it was practically inevitable once a company gets to a certain size to “(BLEEP) it up.” Hmm. How depressing I thought.

Were we destined to eventually (BLEEP) up our culture? We talked about it a bit more, and it became clear that it was possible to defend and actually build the culture. But it had to be one of the things we were most focused on. I thought to myself, how many company CEOs are focused on culture above all else? Is it the metric they measure closest? Is it what they spend most of their hours on each week?

Culture is simply a shared way of doing something with passion.

Our culture is the foundation for our company. We may not be remembered for much after we are gone, and if Airbnb is around 100 years from now, surely we won’t be a booking website for homes. We will be far past this in our evolution (not to mention that kids 100 years from now will be asking their grandparents what websites were).

The thing that will endure for 100 years, the way it has for most 100 year companies, is the culture. The culture is what creates the foundation for all future innovation. If you break the culture, you break the machine that creates your products.

So how do we build culture?

By upholding our core values in everything we do. Culture is a thousand things, a thousand times. It’s living the core values when you hire; when you write an email; when you are working on a project; when you are walking in the hall. We have the power, by living the values, to build the culture. We also have the power, by breaking the values, to (BLEEP) up the culture. Each one of us has this opportunity, this burden.

Why is culture so important to a business? Here is a simple way to frame it. The stronger the culture, the less corporate process a company needs. When the culture is strong, you can trust everyone to do the right thing. People can be independent and autonomous. They can be entrepreneurial. And if we have a company that is entrepreneurial in spirit, we will be able to take our next “(wo)man on the moon” leap. Ever notice how families or tribes don’t require much process? That is because there is such a strong trust and culture that it supersedes any process. In organizations (or even in a society) where culture is weak, you need an abundance of heavy, precise rules and processes.

There are days when it’s easy to feel the pressure of our own growth expectations. Other days when we need to ship product. Others still where we are dealing with the latest government relations issue. It’s easy to get consumed by these. And they are all very important. But compared to culture, they are relatively short-term. These problems will come and go. But culture is forever.

Brian

So, So Good, Right?

And guess what?

You don’t have to be a Fortune 500 company to have exceptional culture!

Think culture only matters to startups? Think again! Organizations, working with us, reduced their turnover by 50% by focusing on their culture!

Want to learn how to create a great culture? Want to find and keep the best employees? Register for our FREE WEBINAR with Denise Boudreau-Scott and Steve Moran on July 23! Mark your calendars! It will be crazy and fun and all about (BLEEPING) culture!